does avast have indonesian language

Cause I have a friend speaks indonesian and some english but I can still understand her… So my question does avast has it cause I search and it doesn’t…

All the existing language versions are available on the download page - so no, I’m afraid there’s no Indonesian version.

There is arabic isn’t it I think lot of indonesians also talk arabic! ;D

Well that sucks cause it’s hard to help someone that I am at usa and she’s way over there… Altho she can understand english and talk well at it… But I do understand her she would want a language that she uses…

is that so? strange, coz i almost spend my entire life here in indonesia. and i don’t speak arabic. ;D

hmm… can i help her? ;D

and running avast in english is not that hard. because i neither speak english nor arabic. ;D

agreed. i have a few Indonesian friends and they don’t know even a word in Arabic.

Hi avast fans,

Maybe there is someone here that could make a translation into Bahasa Indonesia?
Google does not translate better than:
“Seseorang yang dapat menerjemahkan ke dalam Bahasa Indonesia”,

polonus

Would there be in future of indonesian language?

For .: L’ arc :. sake, I will let my mouth sealed in this post. :slight_smile:

Indonesia version will surely help as more than half of South-east Asian population use MIB languague (Malay, Indo & Brunei). It covers Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Southern Thailand and Southern Philipines.

Philippines? Well, I’ll be willing to translate avast in Tagalog though, it seems like it won’t be necessary since English is the second language of Filipinos.

For .: L’ arc :. sake, I will let my mouth sealed in this post. :slight_smile:

Huh? English language is taght all over Philippines. Disregard the country I am displaying on my profile, I am actually a Filipino. By the way, if you mean the other dialects, there are lots of. Commonly Cebuano, Bikolano, Javacano, Panggalatok, Tagalog, Ilocano, Native Bengued, Maguindanaoan, Ivatan, Hiligaynon, etc. Most of the other dialects, Tagalog in exemption, are just changed in pronunciation by pronouncing “e” as “i”, “o” as “u”, and many more vice versas.

Thailand would probably be different.